A member asked:

Anyone heard of vertical heterophoria syndrome?

A doctor has provided 1 answer
Dr. Tim Conrad answered

Specializes in Ophthalmology

This is uncommon: Vertical heterophoria would be a tendency for one eye to move up (or down) in relation to the other other eye. This would cause double vision or blurred vision. Glasses can be made to compensate for this and relieve the symptoms.

Answered 7/7/2018

5.4k views

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